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When
the multimedia artist Sand T (MFA '97) was evicted from her
Boston
studio and gallery to make way for a parking garage, she protested, she
grieved, and then she transformed her loss into action. She found her way to
Malden,
Massachusetts, at
Boston's
northern edge, where she opened a second gallery in the two-car garage next to
her house. In doing so, she unwittingly launched a grassroots cultural movement
that has helped reshape Malden
into an up-and-coming haven for artists.
Sand
T held her first show at the Malden
gallery, artSPACE@16—"a humble yet modern
space," she says—in 2000. There were visual works by nearly twenty artists, an
acoustic music performance, a poetry reading, and a tea-tasting. Since then,
Sand T has promoted and hosted dozens of exhibits at artSPACE@16.
Other local artists and
community
organizers began to follow her determined example: new galleries opened in
Malden,
art-centered events and organizations sprang up, and
city
officials agreed to convert a former convent into downtown studios where artists
will live and work. According to Sand T, "Malden has
great potential in becoming a hotbed for the arts if more inspired residents,
artists, and professionals take the lead in starting and sustaining new
initiatives."
Sand
T, whose full name is Soh H. Tan Kalloch,
grew up in the port city of Malacca,
Malaysia,
making paper lanterns and dolls for her friends, and creating sculptures from
the grass, sand, and mud outside her home. Her most current artwork uses more
sophisticated materials—resin, graphite, spray paint,
and film on gridded Plexiglas panels—but presents a similar "simple visual
experience."
Sand
T attended art school in Kuala
Lumpur,
moved to Boston fifteen
years ago to attend the Museum
School,
and settled into a longstanding community of artists who lived and worked in
Fort Point, Boston.
After her gallery and studio were bulldozed, she was determined to recreate the
same cooperative and innovative spirit she'd experienced in Fort Point. She
chose Malden,
she says, because it was affordable, diverse, and "it was a city next
door."
Despite
the success of artSPACE@16—it was named "
Best
Art
Gallery" in
the A-list consumer poll conducted by WBZ-TV and CityVoter in 2007—Sand T
decided in November to
drastically reduce her exhibit schedule in order to concentrate on her own work. "I will still continue to work on art projects within
Malden's
art community, but with a much lower profile than in the past," she says. "It's
the right time for me to retreat back to the basics of artmaking."
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